Hi Ariel,
Ahhh... now that I see the photos, yes, I can see you are doing the classic "flat plate in a constant speed flow" experiment! I should be able to help you quite a bit, as I teach these concepts to freshman ARO engineering students!
ArielGenesis said:
Rainman: I am varying the angle of attack and they do create diffrent flows (laminar and turbulent). How to calculate Cd by the way. I could use the drag equation but i don't know the drag.
Without a drag balance to measure overall drag on the plate when immersed in the flow, it may get very technical to estimate drag, but I will try to lead you through some parts of it that are fairly standard. First of all, let's start with the definition of CD as we will need to refer to it for answers to other questions you asked:
CD = Drag/(q*Sref)
q = dynamic pressure (see answers to your next post for this)
Sref = characteristic (reference) area. For drag on a flat plate we would typically use the "wetted" area of the plate... IOW, Sref=2*length*width.
First of all, I got confused. Do turbulence increase drag? I had always think that aerodynamic objects expirienced less drag because they induced less turbulence.
Now let us look at the components of total drag (subsonic, incompressible) to answer your question and help you understand:
CD = CDsf + CDp
CDsf = drag coefficient due to skin friction.
CDp = pressure drag coefficient due to pressure difference front-to-back & flow separation from the body (at high AoA).
For LAMINAR flow:
CDsf is LESS than it would be for turbulent flow.
CDp is GREATER than it would be for turbulent flow sinc the flow will separate sooner along the body.
For TURBULENT flow:
CDsf is GREATER than it would be for laminar flow because more air molecules are crossing streamlines and making contact with the surface of the plate (higher friction forces).
CDp is LESS than it would be for laminar flow, because the "random mixing" action of turbulent flow allows the flow to remain attached to the body for a longer length down the body before it eventually separates.
From the explenations since the begining, I might graph Cd againts AoA for my experiment.
The way us "professionals" would do this would be to plot Cd (y axis) against Re (x-axis), and THEN you create a "family of curves" that are all at different values of AoA. This will show you that Cd is smallest at zero AoA, and it will also show you how drag diverges with AoA increase as well as showing the drag effect of Re.
Now let me move on to your next reply...
Rainman